Inspect EXIF, IPTC, XMP and GPS metadata embedded in a photo, including camera, timestamps and location. Runs entirely in your browser.
Digital photos carry hidden metadata describing how and when they were taken. EXIF records camera and exposure details, IPTC and XMP hold captions and rights, and GPS tags can pin the exact location a shot was made. This tool reads that metadata from an image you choose and lists it, which is useful for photography, journalism verification, digital forensics and checking what a picture reveals before you share it.
Input:
photo.jpg
Output:
Make: Apple, Model: iPhone 13, DateTime: 2023:06:01 14:22:10, GPSLatitude: 37.77 N ...
Which formats are supported?
JPEG, TIFF, PNG, WebP and HEIC images that contain EXIF, IPTC or XMP metadata.
Why does my image show no metadata?
Many social platforms and messaging apps strip metadata on upload, and screenshots usually have none. In that case there is nothing to display.
Can it show where a photo was taken?
If the image kept its GPS tags, the latitude and longitude are listed. Most camera phones record this unless location tagging is turned off.
Is my photo uploaded?
No. The image is read locally in your browser and never leaves your device.
Inspect EXIF, IPTC, XMP and GPS metadata embedded in a photo. Everything runs in your browser - your image never leaves your device.
Select an image (JPEG, TIFF, PNG, HEIC, WebP)
Photos often embed the camera model, timestamps and exact GPS coordinates. Check what is in yours before sharing images publicly.